Read this section to learn about patterns of derivatives. Work through practice problems 1-8.
We have some general rules which apply to any elementary combination of differentiable functions, but in order to use the rules we still need to know the derivatives of each of the particular functions. Here we will add to the list of functions whose
derivatives we know.
Derivatives of the Trigonometric Functions
We know the derivatives of the sine and cosine functions, and each of the other four trigonometric functions is just a ratio involving sines or cosines. Using the Quotient Rule, we can differentiate the rest of the trigonometric functions.
Proof: From trigonometry we know , and
and we know
and
Using the Quotient Rule,
Instead of the Quotient Rule, we could have used the Power Rule to calculate .
Practice 3: Use the Quotient Rule on to prove that f
.
Practice 4: Prove that . The justification of this result is very similar to the justification for
Practice 5: Find (a) , (b)
and (c)
.
Derivative of
We can use graphs of exponential functions to estimate the slopes of their tangent lines or we can numerically approximate the slopes.
Example 3: Estimate the derivative of at the point
by approximating the slope of the line tangent to
at that point
Solution: We can get estimates from the graph of by carefully graphing
for small values of
, sketching secant lines, and then measuring the slopes of the
secant lines (Fig. 1).
We can also find the slope numerically by using the definition of the derivative,
, and evaluating
for some very small values
of
.
0.1 | 0.717734625 | ||
-0.I | 0.669670084 | ||
0.01 | 0.69555 | ||
-0.01 | 0.690750451 | ||
0.001 | 0.6933874 | ||
-0.001 | 0.69290695 | ||
From the table we can see that .
Practice 6: Fill in the table for , and show that the slope of the line tangent to
at
is approximately
. (Fig. 2)
At , the slope of the tangent to
is less than 1, and the slope of the tangent to
is slightly greater than 1. (Fig. 3) There is a number, denoted
, between 2 and 3 so that the slope of the
tangent to
is exactly 1:
The number
.
is irrational and is very important and common in calculus and applications.
Once we grant that , it is relatively straightforward to calculate
.
Proof:
The function is its own derivative:
. The height of
at any point and the slope of the tangent to
at that point are the same: as the graph gets higher,
its slope gets steeper.
Example 4: Find (a) , (b)
and (c)
Solution: (a) Using the Product Rule with and
,
(b) Using the Quotient Rule with and
,
(c) Using the Power Rule for Functions with and
,